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57 Sentences With "foliaged"

How to use foliaged in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "foliaged" and check conjugation/comparative form for "foliaged". Mastering all the usages of "foliaged" from sentence examples published by news publications.

During the daytime, it shelters often singly in densely foliaged trees.
At its best, the branches are heavily foliaged and form widely spaced tiers which makes the tree extremely attractive.
It feeds exclusively on Eucalyptus species, preferentially on glaucous foliaged eucalypt species of the subgenus Symphyomyrtus, and particularly the plantation tree E. nitens.
Plantae Preissianae. 1848. volume 2, p. 339. Lasiopetalum baueri is a small densely foliaged spreading shrub high and wide. The new growth is prominently covered with red-brown hair.
Melaleuca polycephala is a shrub in the myrtle family, Myrtaceae, and is endemic to the south-west of Western Australia. It is a sparsely foliaged, twiggy shrub with deep purple flowers in spring.
The responds to the circular piers,—that is, the responds on the wall between the aisles, into which the vaulting of the primary aisles falls,—are half shafts of ordinary Pointed work, without fillets, and of five foliaged heads; the caps of the aisle vaulting are also foliaged. The western responds to the circular shafts are also ordinary Pointed. It is plain, therefore, that the architect could only trust to his palmary development in the isolated shafts. This is the old work: the church being left unfinished in the sixteenth century.
Bush covered rocky hillocks and ravines, and steep banks of rivers and streams are favourite haunts. It spends the day under the shelter of a bush or rocky projection, or in a large mango or similar thickly foliaged tree near villages.
Melaleuca capitata is a shrub in the myrtle family, Myrtaceae and is endemic to New South Wales. It has scaly bark, a densely foliaged habit and attractive heads of creamy-yellow flowers on the ends of its branches in summer.
Eremophila pterocarpa, commonly known as silver poverty bush or winged-fruited eremophila, is a plant in the figwort family, Scrophulariaceae and is endemic to Western Australia. It is a densely foliaged, upright shrub with most of its parts covered with a silvery powder.
Kunzea amathicola, also known by the Maori names manuka and rawiritoa, is a flowering plant in the myrtle family, Myrtaceae and is endemic to New Zealand. It is a densely-branched, densely-foliaged large shrub or tree with sprays of large white flowers with a red centre.
Eremophila fasciata, commonly known as spaghetti eremophila, is a flowering plant in the figwort family, Scrophulariaceae and is endemic to a restricted area of Western Australia. It is a densely-foliaged shrub with grey, felty leaves and blue to violet-coloured flowers clustered at the tips of its branches.
Prostanthera athertoniana is a species of flowering plant in the family Lamiaceae and is endemic to a restricted area of Queensland. It is a small, densely-foliaged shrub with strongly aromatic, elliptical, oblong or egg- shaped leaves and hairy, purplish-mauve flowers arranged singly in upper leaf axils.
Moreover, the use of small trees means that small-foliaged species are preferred. Example varieties include small-foliaged juniper, Hinoki cypress, azalea, and Chinese elm. The aesthetic impact of the saikei display results not from striking individual tree specimens, but from the builder's general landscape design, the cumulative visual impact of several or many live trees, the rocks and soil of the landscape, and the variety of other plant forms placed in the display. Saikei allows multiple species of tree to be placed in a single landscape, and allows other plant forms like flowers and grasses, while multiple plantings in bonsai are typically a single species of tree with moss alone allowed as additional vegetation.
Eremophila glutinosa, commonly known as sticky emu bush, is a flowering plant in the figwort family, Scrophulariaceae and is endemic to Western Australia. It is an erect, densely foliaged shrub with branches and leaves sticky and shiny due to the presence of resin. It has hairy sepals and lilac-coloured flowers.
Prostanthera albohirta is a species of flowering plant in the family Lamiaceae and is endemic to a restricted area of Queensland. It is a small, erect, densely-foliaged shrub with egg-shaped leaves and hairy, lilac to lavender flowers arranged singly in four to twelve leaf axils near the ends of branchlets.
These are popular in the modern style of gardening which uses large-foliaged and "architectural" plants. In Japan, the tree is planted at the birth of a girl. The fast-growing tree matures when she does. When she is eligible for marriage the tree is cut down and carved into wooden articles for her dowry.
Melaleuca plumea is a shrub in the myrtle family, Myrtaceae, and is endemic to the south of Western Australia. It is a widely spreading, densely foliaged shrub which produces masses of deep pink flowers in spring and early summer. Fluffy hairs on parts of the flowers, including the bracts covering the flower buds, are also a feature.
Oval- leaved featherflower is described as "a beautiful, attractively foliaged shrub" which has been grown in gardens and in pots in a range of well-drained soils. It is usually propagated from cuttings although it can also be grown from seed. Grafting onto Chamelaucium uncinatum rootstock has produced bushy shrubs that bear large numbers of flowers.
Melaleuca lanceolata commonly known as black paperbark, moonah, Rottnest Island teatree and western black tea tree is a plant in the myrtle family, Myrtaceae and is native to Australia where it occurs in Western Australia, South Australia, Victoria, New South Wales and Queensland. It is a densely foliaged tree with rough bark, which flowers prolifically in summer.
Eremophila chamaephila is a low, spreading, densely foliaged shrub usually growing to high and wide. The leaves are arranged alternately along lumpy branches and are themselves lumpy on the lower side. They are mostly long and about wide and are dark green often purplish towards their end. The flowers are borne singly in leaf axils and lack a stalk.
Melaleuca ulicoides is a plant in the myrtle family, Myrtaceae and is endemic to the south of Western Australia. It is a small, densely foliaged shrub with small heads of white or cream flowers in spring. It is closely related to Melaleuca marginata but can be distinguished from it by the number and character of leaf veins.
Kisii town enjoys a Tropical highland climate. Temperature vary from lows of 52F July to highs of 79F January ,annually . It generally receives rain all year round thanks to its positioning in the Lake Victoria lake basin and the heavily foliaged Kisii highlands. Due to its unique positioning within hills, Kisii town has never experienced flooding.
Eremophila foliosissima, commonly known as poverty bush, is a flowering plant in the figwort family, Scrophulariaceae and is endemic to Western Australia. It is a small, erect, densely foliaged shrub with long, narrow, hairy leaves and mauve to purple flowers. It is similar to Eremophila gilesii but is more dense and rounded, has more crowded leaves and has different hairs on the flowers.
Melaleuca bracteata is a bushy-foliaged, small to medium tree, normally tall but occasionally taller and it usually flowers and sets seed by the time it is tall. Its bark is rough and dark grey in colour. The leaves are narrow, lance- shaped to linear, long by wide with no stalk, or a very short stalk. The leaves are spirally arranged around the stem and crowded together.
Also, it hybridises with some other wattles, notably the rare and endangered Sydney Basin species Acacia pubescens. A prostrate weeping form is in cultivation. Its origin is unknown, but it is a popular garden plant, with its cascading horizontal branches good for rockeries. The fine foliage of the original Cootamundra wattle is grey-green, but a blue-purple foliaged form, known as 'Purpurea' is very popular.
Eremophila fallax is a flowering plant in the figwort family, Scrophulariaceae and is endemic to Australia. It is a densely-foliaged shrub with leaves which have a hooked tip and with blue to violet flowers. It occurs in South Australia and Western Australia. Without flowers, this species closely resembles Eremophila deserti but that species has 5 stamens and its fruits are a different shape.
Darwinia camptostylis is a densely-foliaged, erect or spreading shrub which grows to a height of less than . The leaves are crowded near the ends of the branches and are flattened or triangular in cross section. They are long and less than . The flowers are clustered near the ends of the branches in groups of two to four pairs, on stalks less than long, .
The restless flycatcher builds a cup-shaped nest from shredded bark and grasses, matted and bound with spider- webbing. Linings used are soft bark, grasses, hair or feathers. It is often decorated with lichen, strips of bark or spiders' egg sacs. The nest site is in the fork of a well-foliaged tree mostly near or overhanging water, though it can be up to twenty or more metres above the ground.
Eremophila fallax is an erect, densely- foliaged, glabrous shrub which usually grows to a height of between . Its leaves are thick, mostly long, wide, narrow elliptic to lance-shaped with a rough surface and a pointed, hooked tip. The flowers are borne singly on a sticky stalk long. There are 5 overlapping green sepals which are lance-shaped to egg-shaped often with a tapering end and long.
A stand of young, narrow, slow-growing, dense-foliaged, suckering field elm, with 'Monumentalis'-like leaves, below the Nelson Monument on Calton Hill, Edinburgh (2020), may be regrowth from one of the specimens from Späth. Aerial photographs from the 1980s show a tree on this site similar in appearance and size to the RBGE specimen.Macdonald, Angus and Macdonald, Patricia, Above Edinburgh and South East Scotland (Edinburgh 1989), p.73, p.
The species begins breeding in response to rodent outbreaks, with pairs nesting in loose colonies of up to 50 birds each. Three to four eggs are laid and incubated for around thirty days, though the eggs may be abandoned if the food source disappears. Chicks are fledged within five weeks of hatching. Roosting in well-foliaged trees during the day, the letter- winged kite hunts mostly at night.
Eremaea pauciflora is an erect, spreading or densely foliaged and rounded shrub sometimes growing to a height of . The leaves are long, wide, linear to narrow egg-shaped with the narrower end towards the base. Sometimes one or 3 veins are visible on the lower surface. The flowers are orange and are borne singly or in pairs on the ends of long branches which grew in the previous year.
The major part of the municipality is classified under slope class 8 to 15 percent. Where such areas are found, it is contiguous to level areas, identified as water retaining areas potentially suited to intensive palay production. Along its North, East and South boundaries is slope class 30% and above, hilly and mountainous are declared as forestal, but not necessarily foliaged. Cabanglasan has an average elevation of 465 meters above sea level.
Talahib Falls is the first waterfall encountered by boat riders heading to Pagsanjan Falls According to history, the Pagsanjan Falls is rich in legendary lore. Long, long ago, recounts one legend, there were no falls. There were only the foliaged highlands, the twin rivers called Bumbungan and Balanac, and the alluvial delta where the town of Pagsanjan now nestles. On the eastern bank of the Bumbungan River lived two old brothers named Balubad and Magdapio.
Eremophila citrina is an erect, densely foliaged, upright shrub usually growing to a height of and almost as wide. Its new leaves and stems are covered with lemon-coloured glandular hairs which gradually fade to grey. The leaves are arranged alternately along the stems and are thick and clustered, and usually have a distinct mid-vein visible on the lower surface. They are linear to narrow egg-shaped, mostly long and about wide.
Empetrum nigrum can be grown in acidic soils in shady, moist areas. It can be grown for the edible fruit, as a ground cover, or as an ornamental plant in rock gardens, notably the yellow- foliaged cultivar 'Lucia'. The fruit is high in anthocyanin pigment, and can be used to make a natural food dye. In subarctic areas, E. nigrum has been a vital addition to the diet of the Inuit and the Sami.
Melaleuca torquata is a densely foliaged shrub with rough bark, growing to about tall. Its leaves are usually arranged alternately and are long and wide, narrow oval to egg-shaped with a prominent mid-vein producing a keel on the lower surface of the leaf. The end of the leaf tapers to a very fine point making the shrub very prickly. The stamens of the flowers are white but the petals are pink or red.
Eremaea brevifolia is an erect, densely foliaged to spreading shrub which sometimes grows to a height of . The leaves are long, wide, flat, crowded and so that they overlap each other. They are broadly egg-shaped with the narrower end towards the base and have 5 to 9 veins visible on the lower surface. The flowers are orange-coloured, across and (usually) occur singly on the end of short branches which grew the previous year.
Melaleuca stramentosa is a densely- foliaged shrub sometimes growing to tall. Its young growth is covered with matted, silky or woolly hairs. The leaves are arranged alternately and are long, wide, linear to very narrow egg-shaped and semi-circular to almost circular in cross section. The flowers are a shade of pink to purple and are arranged in heads on the ends of branches which continue to grow after flowering and sometimes also in the upper leaf axils.
The trees selected are often the tallest and/or most densely foliaged in a given stand. Their close cousin, the African hawk-eagle, usually nests on trees and rarely utilizes crags and alternate nesting sites as does the Bonelli's. Historically, throughout their range in western Europe, Bonelli's eagles were considered almost obligate cliff nesters on almost any rocky environment, from precipitous mountain ranges, canyons over river valleys, even down to low rocky rubble to sea cliffs.Ontiveros, D. (1999).
Kathy Beekman was born in Evanston, Illinois, in April 1971. She is the first of four children of Edward Morris and Mary Lou (Thieme) Morris. She spent the first four years of her life in Illinois before moving with her family to Fort Wayne, Indiana. There her childhood days were filled by playing outdoors in the woods, playing games of hide and seek on her thickly foliaged property, and spending an endless amount of time drawing, coloring and daydreaming.
Most hybrid tea cultivars are not fully hardy in continental areas with very cold winters (below −25 °C). This, combined with their tendency to be stiffly upright, sparsely foliaged and often not resistant to diseases, has led to a decline in hybrid tea popularity among gardeners and landscapers in favor of lower-maintenance "landscape" roses. The hybrid tea remains the standard rose of the floral industry, however, and is still favored in small gardens in formal situations.
Leptospermum obovatum is a densely foliaged shrub that typically grows to a height of about with thin, firm bark on the older stems. It has aromatic, egg- shaped or lance-shaped leaves that are narrower at the base, long and or more wide on a very short petiole. The flowers are borne singly, sometimes in pairs on short side shoots. The flowers are white, wide with reddish brown bracts at the base of the flower bud but that fall before the flowers open.
Eremophila foliosissima is an erect, rounded, densely foliaged shrub usually growing to no more than tall with stems and leaves covered with short, stiff, curved white hairs. Older leaves usually hang down the stem, forming a thick mat over its surface. The leaves are crowded along the stems, linear in shape with a deep groove on the lower surface, mostly long, wide, usually shiny and sticky when young. The flowers are usually borne singly in leaf axils on a hairy stalk, long.
Leptospermum nitudum is a densely foliaged, compact shrub that typically grows to a height of and has scaly bark. The leaves are aromatic, mostly glabrous, elliptical, long, wide and glossy, usually with a sharp point on the tip and tapering at the base to a short petiole. The flowers are white, about wide and arranged on the ends of leafy side branches. There are golden brown bracts and bracteoles at the base of the flower buds but that usually fall off before the flower opens.
The shrubs tend to be stiffly upright and sparsely foliaged, which today is often seen as a liability because it makes them more difficult to place in the garden or landscape. Hybrid teas became the single most popular garden rose of the 20th century; today, their reputation as high maintenance plants has led to a decline in popularity. The hybrid tea remains the standard rose of the floral industry, however, and is still favoured in formal situations. Examples: 'Peace' (yellow), 'Garden Party' (white), 'Mister Lincoln' (red) and 'Double Delight' (bi-colour cream and red).
Gatling guns were used by the U.S. Army during the Philippine–American War. One such instance was during the Battle of San Jacinto () which was fought on November 11, 1899 in San Jacinto in the Philippines, between Philippine Republican Army soldiers and American troops.Linn, B.M., 2000, The Philippine War, 1899-1902, Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, The Gatling's weight and artillery carriage hindered its ability to keep up with American troops over uneven terrain, particularly in the Philippines, where outside the cities there were heavily foliaged forests and steep mountain paths.
Melaleuca pustulata is a densely foliaged shrub, growing to tall with hairy new growth. Its leaves are arranged alternately, sometimes in groups of three and are long, wide, very narrow elliptic to very narrow egg- shaped, roughly semi-circular in cross section and with the ends tapering to a point. The mature leaves have distinct raised oil glands giving the leaves a blistered appearance. The flowers are white to yellowish, scented and arranged in spikes or heads on the ends of branches that continue to grow after flowering.
The species once occurred through much of southwestern Australia, with an outlying subspecies in the Gawler Ranges of South Australia. The range of the nominate subspecies, which used to inhabit inland locations, has contracted westwards to the Shark Bay region since 1910. The cause is probably the decline in habitat quality resulting from overgrazing, which has reduced the availability of cover and nesting sites. Its preferred habitat is low, often Acacia dominated, semiarid shrubland, no more than a metre in height, that forms densely foliaged clumps and thickets.
Ilex cornuta, commonly known as Chinese holly or horned holly, is a slow- growing, densely foliaged evergreen shrub in the Aquifoliaceae plant family. It is native to eastern China and KoreaHillier Nurseries, The Hillier Manual of Trees and Shrubs, David & Charles, 1998, p281 and attains a height of about . The leaves are usually 5-spined (sometimes 4), between 3.5 cm and 10 cm long,Phillips, R. & Rix, M., Shrubs, Macmillan, 1994, p277 oblong and entire. The fruits are red berries, which are larger than those of the European Holly (Ilex aquifolium).
Lasiopetalum schulzenii, commonly known as drooping velvet bush, is a common shrub of the mallow family. It was first described in the genus Corethrostylis by botanist Ferdinand von Mueller in a paper presented before the Royal Society of Victoria; that genus was treated as a section of Lasiopetalum by George Bentham in his 1863 Flora Australiensis, resulting in the current name. The species was named after the 19th century botanist Ludwig F. Schulzen. Lasiopetalum schulzenii is a spreading many-stemmed densely foliaged shrub to in height and across.
Prostanthera athertoniana is a densely-foliaged shrub that typically grows to a height of about with hairy, cylindrical stems. The leaves are aromatic, densely hairy, dull green, paler on the lower surface, elliptical, oblong or egg-shaped, long and wide on a petiole long. The flowers are arranged singly in two to four leaf axils near the ends of branchlets, each flower on a pedicel long. The sepals are green and purple, densely covered on the outside with white hairs, and form a tube about long with two lobes, the lower lobe long wide and the upper lobe long and wide.
Running Press, Philadelphia. The Eurasian eagle-owl is found in many habitats but is mostly a bird of mountain regions, coniferous forests, steppes and other relatively remote places, and have occasionally been found near farmland and in park-like settings within European cities; in 2020, a brood of three chicks were raised by their mother on a large, well-foliaged planter on an apartment window in the city centre of Geel, Belgium. It is a mostly nocturnal predator, hunting for a range of different prey species, predominantly small mammals but also birds of varying sizes, reptiles, amphibians, fish, large insects and other assorted invertebrates. It typically breeds on cliff ledges, in gullies, among rocks or in other concealed locations.
The wings contain ten stories, are pierced by round loop-holes for the admission of light, and probably served as chambers or dormitories for the priests and servitors of the temple. From the jambs of the door project two blocks of stone, which were intended, as Ddnon supposes, to support the heads of two colossal figures. This propylaeon leads into a large square, surrounded by a colonnade roofed with squared granite, and on the opposite side is a pronaos or portico, in height, and having a triple row of columns, six in each row, with variously and gracefully foliaged capitals. The temple is wide, and long from the entrance to the opposite end.
The castle is situated in a scenic location in a cape in the lake Ringsjön; the zoological garden is situated just north of the town of Höör. Sights in the town proper are few in the little town with its 7,000 inhabitants, but it has a large 12th-century church, with a north transept from 1769 (an unusual date for Skåne churches) and a 19th-century tower, along with some picturesque older houses. A peaceful place, the typical Höör house is one or two storeys tall, with no large streets. Adding to the picturesque image are two centrally located small ponds with densely foliaged trees and bushes surrounding them, which increases in thickness until they unite with the forests surrounding the town.
The scenes below which the verses appear are also quite different from each other. Calvert’s view is across the river from the opposite bank of the Wye,National Library of Wales while the Rock print is close up to the ruins with the river in the background.Rare Old Prints, Publisher's Ref: 1105 South Window, a print by Frederick Calvert, 1815 Tintern is not specifically named in the verses mentioned above, although it is in two other sets and their poetic form overall is consistent: paired quatrains with pentameter lines rhymed alternately. One set begins "Yes, sacred Tintern, since thy earliest age," and King Henry is again represented as being foiled in his intention, but this time by no "earthly king". The Abbey’s roof is now "of Heaven’s all glorious blue" and its pillars "foliaged… in vivid hue".
The Celtic cross has nevertheless been repeated in statuary, as a dominant feature of the anthropogenic Irish landscape, for at least 5,000 years. The Celtic cross and the Christian cross are similar enough in shape, that the former was easily adopted by Irish Catholic culture, following the Christianization of Ireland. The Celtic cross is accurately described as an ancient symbol of cultural significance in pre-Christian, Druidic Ireland. It also is used as a symbolic icon of the interpretation of Christianity, unique to Irish culture in that pre-Christian Celtic tradition and Irish Druidic iconography are hybridized with Christian traditions and iconography (much like the Shamrock; a low-growing, daintily foliaged, dense ground cover plant, which is held as a timeless symbol of Ireland itself; and, which is also symbolic on Ireland, of the Christian Holy Trinity, due to the Shamrock's typical trifoliar leaf structure).

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